A majority of Americans in a survey said the pandemic changed their personalities.
They said they felt more conscientious, more open, more empathetic, and smarter.
But psychologists are skeptical about how much that will persist once life goes back to normal.
To say that Evan Shearin is emerging from the pandemic a kinder, gentler, more open-minded, and smarter version of himself may be an exaggeration. But it s not off base.
Without a commute, Shearin, an Indianapolis software consultant in his late 30s, had more time for learning new things. He taught himself how to cook, took online guitar lessons, got professional certifications, and tried his hand at planting an herb garden.
Only 6% of Americans Have a Biblical Worldview
Thursday, May 13, 2021 @ 11:45 AM
Everyone has an overall perspective from which the world is seen and interpreted. It’s called a “worldview.”
The Cultural Research Center (CRC) at Arizona Christian University, interviewed a nationally representative sample of 2,000 adults to determine what worldview Americans hold. It’s called The American Worldview Inventory (AWVI) 2021.
The results are startling…and convicting.
Though 65% of American adults describe themselves as “Christian” according to 2018-2019 Pew research, this CRC study indicates only 6% actually hold to a biblical worldview.
This just might explain why a wide variety of surveys over the years reflect scripturally inconsistent beliefs and behaviors of “Christians.” For instance, in a 2020 CRC study, American adults answered a survey asking if people are “basically good.” Among the broad spectrum of those surveyed, 70% answered affirmatively.
HMO supplementation may boost bowel function and help adults with IBS: Study Supplementation with the human milk oligosaccharides (HMOs) HMOs 2 -fucosyllactose (2 FL), and lacto-N-neotetraose (LNnT) may normalize bowel function and improve bloating and IBS severity in adults, says a new study.
Five grams per day of 2 FL and LNnT in a 4:1 mass ratio for 12 weeks led to significant improvements in the number of bowel movements with abnormal stool consistency, the IBS Symptom Severity Score, and quality of life for the 245 people who completed the study.
“This is the first large-scale trial to show that adult patients with IBS can achieve an improvement of IBS symptoms with supplementation of HMOs,” wrote scientists from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Glycom A/S, and the University of Gothenburg in
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